The Gompertz curve is like watching a plant grow from a tiny seed to a full-grown tree, but it doesn’t just keep growing faster and faster forever.
Imagine you have a plate of cookies, and each day you eat one cookie. At first, the number of cookies left gets smaller slowly, but after a while, you're eating them more quickly, like when you’re really hungry. That’s how the Gompertz curve works: it starts growing slowly, then speeds up, and finally slows down again as it nears its maximum size.
Like a Race to the Top
Think of it like climbing a mountain. You start off walking slowly, but soon you're running, you’re gaining height quickly. But when you get close to the top, your legs feel tired, and you slow down again. That’s the Gompertz curve: slow at first, then faster in the middle, and finally slower near the end.
This kind of growth happens a lot in real life, like when a person grows from a baby to an adult, or when bacteria multiply in a petri dish. It's not just for cookies or mountains, it’s part of how many things grow!
Ask a question
See also
- How Does France’s Darkest Hours: When the SS Publicly Executed Resistance Fighters Work?
- How To Use An Abacus?
- What do GPS and AGPS mean?
- What is 9 calories per gram?
- What is Temperatures between 60°C and 75°C?